Part 20 (1/2)
Thus the mids.h.i.+pmen talked on. They almost forgot their own misfortunes and abominable ill-treatment while thinking of their friends. Some coa.r.s.e bread and cheese was handed to them in a dirty basket, and water was the only liquid given them to drink; while at night no bedding nor the slightest accommodation was afforded them. In vain the officers pleaded. The men to whom they spoke only laughed and jeered at them, and poor young Elmore only came in for a greater share of abuse when by some means it was discovered that he was what they called an English aristocrat.
”Ah, milord!” exclaimed one fellow with a horrid grin; ”if we had you in _la belle France_, your head would not remain long on your shoulders.
We guillotine all such. It's the best way to treat them. They have trampled too long on our rights, to be forgiven.”
The next morning the British seamen and officers were ordered up on deck, and, being placed near the gangway, were surrounded by a guard of marines with fixed bayonets. If they attempted to move from the spot, they soon had notice to go back again.
The prize had parted company, and they supposed had been sent into port; but the frigate herself stood away to the westward to continue her cruise. In spite of the general want of discipline, a very bright lookout was kept for any strange sail in sight. In the afternoon watch a vessel was seen to the southward, and the frigate bore up in chase.
The stranger, on seeing this, made all sail to escape.
The French seamen pointed her out to the British. ”Ah! ah! we shall soon have her!” they exclaimed. ”See, the cowards dare not wait our coming up.”
Meantime, Paul Pringle lay in his berth, pretty well cared for, and most devotedly watched by True Blue. Billy was advised by the kind doctor to show himself as little as possible, lest he should be ordered to join the rest of the prisoners. He occasionally, however, stole out, that he might ascertain for Paul in what direction the s.h.i.+p was steering, and what was taking place. It was towards the evening that he came quickly back and reported that he had seen all the prisoners hurried below on a sudden, and that the wind being from the westward, all sail had been made on the frigate, and that she had been put dead before it, having abandoned the chase of the vessel of which she had been in pursuit.
”What it means I don't quite know,” observed True Blue; ”but there's something in the wind, of that I'm pretty certain.”
The tramping of feet overhead, the hurried pa.s.sing of the crew up and down, showed Paul also that such was the case. True Blue was standing at the door of the berth when the surgeon came below, and, as he pa.s.sed him, whispered, ”Keep quiet with your friend, boy. The crew may not be in the humour to bear the sight of you.” He did as he was advised for some time; but, peeping out, he saw the powder-boys carrying up powder and shot, and other missiles from the magazine, while the flurry and bustle increased, and he felt sure that the frigate was going into action.
”Paul, I must go and learn what it is all about,” he said. ”I suppose that we are coming up with the chase.”
Paul, not supposing there would be any risk, did not prevent his going.
He crept out quietly. Everybody was so busy that no one remarked him.
He looked out at one of the bow-ports; but nothing was to be seen ahead.
He glanced on the other side; not a sail was in sight.
He came back to the berth. ”Paul!” he exclaimed joyfully, ”it is not that the frigate is chasing, but she is being chased. She seems to be under all sail, and in a desperate hurry to get away.”
”We've a chance, then, of not having to see the inside of a French port,” observed Paul Pringle. ”That's a thing to be thankful for; but, Billy, it's sad news we shall have to take home about Abel, and Peter, and the rest. I must go and break it to Mrs Ogle and Mrs Bush, and their children. It will make my heart bleed--that it will, I know.”
Paul and True Blue talked on for some time, as very naturally they often did, about their old s.h.i.+p and s.h.i.+pmates, till their well-practised ears caught the sound of a distant gun.
”That's right aft!” exclaimed Paul. ”It comes, I doubt, from the leading s.h.i.+p of the pursuing squadron. I pray that the frigate may not escape them.”
”I must go on deck and see how many s.h.i.+ps there are,” said True Blue.
”The Frenchmen can but kick me down again, and I can easily jump out of their way.”
He had not gone long when down he came again, panting as if for want of breath. ”Oh, Paul!” he exclaimed, ”I thought to have seen two or three frigates or a line-of-battle s.h.i.+p at least; but, would you believe it, there is but one frigate, more like the _Ruby_ than any s.h.i.+p I ever saw; and if I didn't know for certain that her keel was at the bottom of the Atlantic, I could have sworn that it was she herself. It quite took away my breath to look at her, and then when the Frenchmen saw me looking at the stranger, they hove their gun-sponges and rammers at me, so I had to run for it to get out of their way.”
”Billy, I wish that I could have a look at this stranger the Frenchmen are so afraid of,” said Paul. ”If she is a frigate I have seen before, I should know her again.”
”I don't mind the Frenchmen. I will go and have another look at her,”
answered True Blue. ”We shall soon be within speaking distance of her guns.”
As he spoke, he kept moving about the berth like a hyena in its cage; and soon, unable any longer to restrain his impatience, out he darted and unimpeded reached the deck. The pursuing frigate ran up the British colours, and opened her fire with a couple of bow-chasers. She had good reason to do so, for the Frenchman was steering to the southward and land was ahead. One of the shot struck the counter of _La Ralieuse_, the other pa.s.sed a little on one side. True Blue gazed earnestly and long at the English frigate. He was recalled in a disagreeable way to a sense of where he was by feeling the point of a cutla.s.s pressed against his back, and, looking round, he saw a seaman with no pleasant looks grinning at him and pointing below.
What the man said he could not make out. He got out of the fellow's way and hurried below. ”Paul, I am right!” he exclaimed. ”She is either the _Ruby_ or another frigate so like her that you couldn't tell one from the other.”
The next ten minutes were pa.s.sed in a state of great anxiety, and when True Blue again looked out, he reported that the Frenchmen were shortening sail preparatory to commencing action. The crew were all at their stations. An unusual silence reigned on board. The Captain was making a speech. It was about liberty, equality, and fraternity, and the _bonnet rouge_ was displayed.
The cheers were cut very short by a broadside from the English frigate, the shot of which crashed through the Frenchman's sides, tore up the planks, and carried off the heads of two or more of the cheerers.